Cuba, Havana —
Between the first and second nationwide blackouts that Cuba suffered in July, I was in line behind two psychologists wearing white medical coats and openly discussing their patients.
“I don’t worry about the people who say they are stressed out,” one said to the other psychologist in the line to buy food that’s trucked in weekly from the countryside. “It’s the people who say they are fine. There is something really the matter with them.”
Cuba’s energy grid failed again on Tuesday, for a third time this month, plunging nearly 10 million Cubans into darkness and further uncertainty. Anxiety over the future is hitting an all time high here.
As the communist-run island’s economy unravels and the Trump administration piles on with ever punishing sanctions, the Cuban revolution would seem to be drawing its final breath.












